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单词 ovum
释义

ovum


o·vum

O0201500 (ō′vəm)n. pl. o·va (ō′və) The mature female gamete of an animal; an egg.
[Latin ōvum, egg; see awi- in Indo-European roots.]

ovum

(ˈəʊvəm) n, pl ova (ˈəʊvə) (Biology) an unfertilized female gamete; egg cell[from Latin: egg]

o•vum

(ˈoʊ vəm)

n., pl. o•va (ˈoʊ və) the female reproductive cell, developed in the ovary; female gamete; egg cell. [1700–10; < Latin ōvum]

o·vum

(ō′vəm) Plural ova See egg.

ovum

1. (pl. ova) A female gamete or egg.2. (pl. ova) An egg; a female sex cell.
Thesaurus
Noun1.ovum - the female reproductive cellovum - the female reproductive cell; the female gameteegg cellegg - animal reproductive body consisting of an ovum or embryo together with nutritive and protective envelopes; especially the thin-shelled reproductive body laid by e.g. female birdsgamete - a mature sexual reproductive cell having a single set of unpaired chromosomesootid - mature ovum after penetration by sperm but before the formation of a zygoteovule - a small or immature ovumfemale reproductive system - the reproductive system of females
Translations

ovum

(ˈəuvəm) plural ova (ˈouvə) noun the egg from which the young of people and animals develop.

ovum


ovum

(ō`vəm), in biology, specialized plant or animal sex cell, also called the egg, or egg cell. It is the female sex cell, or female gamete; the male gamete is the spermsperm
or spermatozoon
, in biology, the male gamete (sex cell), corresponding to the female ovum in organisms that reproduce sexually. In higher animals the sperm is produced in the testis of the male; it is much smaller than the ovum and consists primarily of a head,
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. The study of the ovum is included in the science of embryology. The development of a new individual from an unfertilized ovum is called parthenogenesisparthenogenesis
[Gr.,=virgin birth], in biology, a form of reproduction in which the ovum develops into a new individual without fertilization. Natural parthenogenesis has been observed in many lower animals (it is characteristic of the rotifers), especially insects, e.g.
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.

In higher animals the ovum differs from the sperm in that it is larger and is nonmotile, a smooth sphere or oval lacking the flagellum of the sperm. Like that of the sperm, its nucleus contains the chromosomes, which bear the hereditary material of the parent. A gamete, ovum or sperm, contains half the number of chromosomes found in the body cells of the parent, i.e., the gamete is haploid. In animals, ova contain stored food called the yolk, the amount of which varies in different species, depending on the length of time required for the embryo to become self-sufficient in obtaining nourishment outside the egg.

The term ovum is usually restricted to the single female sex cell, but the term egg, in its common use to indicate a bird's egg, refers to a more complex structure, only part of which is produced in the ovary of the bird. The ovum of such an egg is a cell swollen with yolk material. The rest of the egg—e.g., the jelly mass surrounding amphibian eggs, and the shell, membranes, and egg white, or albumen, of bird eggs—is not cellular and is secreted around the ovum as it passes down the oviduct.

Animal Ova

Oogenesis

Ova are produced in the ovaryovary,
ductless gland of the female in which the ova (female reproductive cells) are produced. In vertebrate animals the ovary also secretes the sex hormones estrogen and progesterone, which control the development of the sexual organs and the secondary sexual characteristics.
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 of the female; they are formed from reproductive cells (called primordial germ cells) in a process called oogenesis. In this maturation process a germ cell builds up its food supply and then undergoes a series of cell divisions (called meiosismeiosis
, process of nuclear division in a living cell by which the number of chromosomes is reduced to half the original number. Meiosis occurs only in the process of gametogenesis, i.e., when the gametes, or sex cells (ovum and sperm), are being formed.
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), by which the number of chromosomes in the mature ovum is reduced by half. In oogenesis in animals only one of the four cells formed by meiotic division is functional. In this ovum all the yolk from the original cell is collected; the three other, yolkless, cells are called polar bodies and never develop further. Maturation also occurs in the formation of sperm (spermatogenesis), but in spermatogenesis, in contrast to oogenesis, all four of the cells formed by meiotic division are functional.

Fertilization and Maturation

The union of mature sperm and ovum, each bearing half the normal number of chromosomes, results in a single cell (the zygote) with a full number of chromosomes. The zygote undergoes a series of cell divisions (see mitosismitosis
, process of nuclear division in a living cell by which the carriers of hereditary information, or the chromosomes, are exactly replicated and the two copies distributed to identical daughter nuclei.
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) producing a multicellular embryoembryo
, name for the developing young of an animal or plant. In its widest definition, the embryo is the young from the moment of fertilization until it has become structurally complete and able to survive as a separate organism.
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 and finally a mature individual. In all sexually reproducing animals the production and maturation of the ovum, its fertilizationfertilization,
in biology, process in the reproduction of both plants and animals, involving the union of two unlike sex cells (gametes), the sperm and the ovum, followed by the joining of their nuclei.
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, and its early embryonic development are essentially identical.

Plant Ova

In plants that reproduce sexually the pattern is similar to that of animals. In the mosses and ferns, however, the egg cells are formed in special organs called archegonia and are fertilized by sperm that are commonly flagellated and motile like those of animals. In flowering plants the ovary is situated in the base of the pistilpistil
, one of the four basic parts of a flower, the central structure around which are arranged the stamens, the petals, and the sepals. The pistil is usually called the female reproductive organ of a flowering plant, although the actual reproductive structures are microscopic.
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 of the flower. After fertilization by a sperm contained in a pollen grain, the zygote develops into the embryo, contained in the seed.

Ovum

The egg or female sex cell. Strictly speaking, the term refers to this cell when it is ready for fertilization, but it is often applied to earlier or later stages. Confusion is avoided by using qualifying adjectives such as immature, ripe, mature, fertilized, or developing ova. The mature ova are generally spheroidal and large. The number of ova produced at one time varies in different animals, from millions in many marine animals that spawn into the surrounding sea water to about a dozen or less in mammals in which adaptations for internal nourishment of the developing embryo and care of the young are highly developed.

Section of a mammalian ovarySection of a mammalian ovary

In the ovary the immature ovum is associated with follicle cells through which it receives material for growth. In mammals, as the egg matures, these cells arrange themselves into a structure known as the Graafian, or vesicular, follicle, consisting of a large fluid-filled cavity into which the ovum, surrounded by several layers of cells, projects from the layer of follicle cells that constitutes the inner wall (see illustration). The fluid contains estrogenic female sex hormone secreted by cells in an intermediate layer of the follicular wall.

Yolk, or deutoplasm, is essentially a food reserve in the form of small spherules, present to a greater or lesser extent in all eggs. It accounts largely for the differences in size of eggs. Eggs are classified according to the distribution of yolk. In the isolecithal type there is a nearly uniform distribution through the cytoplasm, as in most small eggs. The yolk in telolecithal eggs is increasingly concentrated toward one pole, as in the large eggs of fish, amphibians, reptiles, and birds. Centrolecithal, or centrally located, yolk occurs in eggs of insects and cephalopod mollusks. See Gametogenesis, Oogenesis

Ovum

An egg-shaped ornamental motif, used in ornamental bands in found in Classical architecture and Classical Revival styles.

ovum

[′ō·vəm] (cell and molecular biology) A female gamete. Also known as egg.

ovum

In classical architecture and derivatives, an egg-shaped ornamental motif.

ovum

an unfertilized female gamete; egg cell

ovum


ovum

 [o´vum] (pl. o´va) (L.) the female reproductive or germ cell which after fertilization is capable of developing into a new member of the same species; called also egg. The term is sometimes applied to any stage of the fertilized germ cell during cleavage and even until hatching or birth of the new individual. The human ovum consists of protoplasm that contains some yolk, enclosed by a cell wall consisting of two layers, an outer one (zona pellucida) and an inner, thin one (membrane" >vitelline membrane). There is a large nucleus (germinal vesicle) within which is a nucleolus (germinal spot). adj., adj o´vular.Ovum.centrolecithal ovum one with the yolk concentrated at the center of the egg, surrounded by a peripheral shell of cytoplasm, and with an island of cytoplasm surrounding the nucleus, such as that of an arthropod.holoblastic ovum one that undergoes total cleavage.isolecithal ovum one with a small amount of yolk evenly distributed throughout the cytoplasm.meroblastic ovum one that undergoes partial cleavage.primitive ovum (primordial ovum) any oocyte very early in its development.telolecithal ovum one with a comparatively large amount of yolk massed at one pole, such as that of a reptile or bird.

o·vum

, gen.

ovi

, pl.

o·va

(ō'vŭm, -vī, -vă), The term ovum is imprecise because it has been variously applied to stages from the primary oocyte to the implanting blastocyst.
See also: oocyte.
[L. egg]

ovum

(ō′vəm)n. pl. ova (ō′və) The mature female gamete of an animal; an egg.

ovum

A female reproductive cell that has a haploid genetic complement (22 somatic chromosomes and one X chromosome) which, once united with the sperm, is termed a fertilised egg.

o·o·cyte

(ō'ŏ-sīt) The female sex cell. When fertilized by a sperm, a gamete or zygote is capable of developing into a new individual of the same species; during maturation, the oocyte, like the sperm, undergoes a halving of its chromosomal complement so that, at its union with the male gamete, the species number of chromosomes (46 in humans) is maintained; yolk contained in the oocyte (ova in nonhuman species) varies greatly in amount and distribution, which influences the pattern of the cleavage divisions. In nonhuman females, the term is ovum. [G. ōon, egg, + kytos, a hollow (cell)]

ovum

(o'vum) plural.ova [L., egg] 1. The female reproductive or germ cell.2. A cell that is capable of developing into a new organism of the same species. Usually fertilization by a spermatozoon is necessary, although in some lower animals ova develop without fertilization (parthenogenesis). See: conception; fertilization; menstrual cycle; menstruation

alecithal ovum

An ovum with a small yolk portion that is distributed throughout the protoplasm. Synonym: isolecithal ovum

centrolecithal ovum

An ovum having a large central food yolk, as in a bird's egg.

holoblastic ovum

An ovum that undergoes complete cleavage, as opposed to partial or meroblastic cleavage.HUMAN OVUM

human ovum

The female gamete, required for reproduction. The ovum develops from an oogonium within the graafian follicle of the ovary and matures through the meiotic process of oogenesis. A mature ovum is about 0.13 to 0.14 mm (0.0051 to 0.0055 in) in diameter. At ovulation, the ovum is bounded by a translucent cellular membrane (the zona pellucida), which is connected to a layer of follicular cells (the corona radiata); these cells enclose the cytoplasm, nuclei, and chromatin material. The exact time during which a human ovum is capable of fertilization and further development before degenerating is not known; however, it is probably 24 hr. See: illustration; oogenesis; ovulation

isolecithal ovum

Alecithal ovum.

mature ovum

A secondary oocyte that has completed its second meiotic division as a result of contact with a sperm. The nucleus of the mature ovum becomes the female pronucleus.

meroblastic ovum

An ovum in which only the protoplasmic region undergoes cleavage, characteristic in ova containing a large amount of yolk.

permanent ovum

An ovum ready for fertilization.

primordial ovum

A germ cell that arises very early in the development of the embryo, usually in the yolk sac endoderm, migrates into the urogenital ridge, and is the precursor for the functional gamete.

telolecithal ovum

An ovum in which the yolk is fairly abundant and tends to concentrate in one hemisphere.

ovum

The female gamete or ovum which, when fertilized by a spermatozoon, can give rise to a new individual. The egg is a very large cell, compared with other body cells, and contains only 23 chromosomes, half the normal number (haploid). Like most other cells ova contain many mitochondria each containing many copies of mitochondrial DNA. This DNA is not present in sperms.

ovum

or

egg

or

egg cell

(pl. ova) a functional egg cell of an animal, produced by GAMETOGENESIS. Ova are frequently packed with nutritive yolk granules and are usually immobile (see OOGAMY). The human egg is about 0.14 mm in diameter, which is some 50,000 times larger than the human sperm.

Ovum (plural: ova)

The reproductive cell of the female, which contains genetic information and participates in the act of fertilization. Also popularly called the egg.Mentioned in: Infertility

o·vum

, pl. ova (ō'vŭm, -vă) Term is imprecise because it has been variously applied to various stages from the primary oocyte to the implanting blastocyst.
See: oocyte
[L. egg]

Patient discussion about ovum

Q. Is there any difference between brown eggs and white eggs? My fitness instructor suggested me to have brown eggs instead of white eggs so is there any difference between brown eggs and white eggs?A. I have to agree with you. Never heard of any difference between the two and it doesnt sound reasonable that one is better to your health than the other...

Q. why the renal doctor told my husband that he needs to eat a dozen of egg a week for protein,how it will help? it won`t afect his cholesterol,also i would like to know what role the protein plays on his treatment and what other foot its rich in protein that he can can take,without causing problems to his health.A. if i understand correctly, your husband is diabetic. like my grandfather he probably developed a "Diabetic nephropathy" which is a long name to: kidney being destroyed because of blood vessels clotted by diabetes. because of that destruction the kidneys allow protein to go out in the urine. this is a dangerous situation,a protein in the name of "albomin" helps our blood to hold fluids in blood vessels. without it fluid will leave the blood and go to our organs. not a good situation. so he needs a lot of proteins.
here is a list of a 100 protein rich foods:
http://smarterfitter.com/blog/2007/10/28/100-most-protein-rich-vegetarian-foods/

Q. How can I catch Salmonella? Yesterday I ate a mousse which was made from raw eggs. Could I have caught Salmonella?A. Salmonella infections usually resolve in 5-7 days and often do not require treatment unless the patient becomes severely dehydrated or the infection spreads from the intestines. Persons with severe diarrhea may require rehydration, often with intravenous fluids (IV). Antibiotics are not usually necessary unless the infection spreads from the intestines.

More discussions about ovum

ovum


Related to ovum: Blighted ovum
  • noun

Synonyms for ovum

noun the female reproductive cell

Synonyms

  • egg cell

Related Words

  • egg
  • gamete
  • ootid
  • ovule
  • female reproductive system
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